Jan and Cora Gordon

Jan and Cora Gordon were artists, travelers, writers and musicians; their combined body of work provides a vivid and intimate connection with the Europe of the period from before the First World War to the 1930s.

Their pre-WW1 existence in Paris is full of fascinating connections with the celebrated artists and poets of that revolutionary time (see http://www.janandcoragordonart.com for many articles on their famous Bohemian acquaintances, never before deciphered).

In a 1912 issue of The Studio can be found an early reference to the work of Jan Gordon exhibited at the Société Nationale des Beaux-Arts, Paris: "Amongst the works by British and American artists in this Salon the most able and sincere were shown by Mr. Jan Gordon, ...."

Jack Bilbo wrote an obituary for Jan in this same magazine 32 years later ( http://www.pbase.com/hajar/obituary ). “I remember when he and Cora used to sit in my den on Saturday afternoons when the gallery was closed, when we exchanged travel experiences from Spain and Yugoslavia, from Mexico and Scandinavia, or talked about artists and paintings, how the four walls of my little room seemed to move away into far distances.”

Two useful biographical essays on the Gordons by K.J. Bryant can be found in "Book and Magazine Collector" (March 1990) and the preface to the 2007 Bene Factum edition of "Two Vagabonds in Languedoc" (he later produced a website which is frustratingly error-prone and missing much of the important source material). A large number (over 200 now) of more recent short essays with abundant original content can be found here: http://www.janandcoragordonart.com , a major resource for primary information on the couple.